Let's be honest here, you have been playing the "Pick The Top" game for quite some time in this IWM Index. Moreover, every week you come out and state that the trend is overextended and in need of a 2-3 day pullback . . .
The problem with your methodology is that there is NO methodology. There are no technicals divergences that would indicate a top here. Yes, the sentiment measures are quite excessive. Yet, the market has not broken any significant moving averages and your trade of being short the IWM is quite frankly like
"pissing into the wind"
You ask how anyone could do any buying right here into such an extended trend, and yet the IWM that you say that you trade is up from 114.50 as of last Tuesday.
That's a +4% move in the past 5 trading days!
By the way, anyone happen to see the Semiconductor Book-To-Bill ratio after the close today?
1.20 for December
The above number means that there was $120 worth of new orders received for every $100 of product billed for the month.
Furthermore, the 3-month average of worldwide bookings in December 2003 was $1.1 billion. The bookings figure is 19% above the revised November 2003 level of $923 million and 33 percent above the $827 million in orders posted in December 2002.
The December data support the positive outlook for strong growth in semiconductor capital investment this year," said Stanley Myers, president and CEO of SEMI. "Analysts presenting at the SEMI Industry Strategy Symposium this month were in agreement that 2004 is shaping up to be a double-digit growth year for the global semiconductor equipment industry."
Now it could very well be that much of this data is already priced into the chip-sector right now. It will be interesting to see how the
SMH reacts to this news, because as we all know it isn't the news per se that is important; it is HOW THE MARKET RESPONDS to the news.
I'm flat here.
And very flexible to react either way.
